Re: [PATCH][RFC] mm: Introduce kernelcore=reliable option

From: Xishi Qiu
Date: Fri Oct 09 2015 - 06:37:10 EST


On 2015/10/9 17:24, Kamezawa Hiroyuki wrote:

> On 2015/10/09 15:46, Xishi Qiu wrote:
>> On 2015/10/9 22:56, Taku Izumi wrote:
>>
>>> Xeon E7 v3 based systems supports Address Range Mirroring
>>> and UEFI BIOS complied with UEFI spec 2.5 can notify which
>>> ranges are reliable (mirrored) via EFI memory map.
>>> Now Linux kernel utilize its information and allocates
>>> boot time memory from reliable region.
>>>
>>> My requirement is:
>>> - allocate kernel memory from reliable region
>>> - allocate user memory from non-reliable region
>>>
>>> In order to meet my requirement, ZONE_MOVABLE is useful.
>>> By arranging non-reliable range into ZONE_MOVABLE,
>>> reliable memory is only used for kernel allocations.
>>>
>>
>> Hi Taku,
>>
>> You mean set non-mirrored memory to movable zone, and set
>> mirrored memory to normal zone, right? So kernel allocations
>> will use mirrored memory in normal zone, and user allocations
>> will use non-mirrored memory in movable zone.
>>
>> My question is:
>> 1) do we need to change the fallback function?
>
> For *our* requirement, it's not required. But if someone want to prevent
> user's memory allocation from NORMAL_ZONE, we need some change in zonelist
> walking.
>

Hi Kame,

So we assume kernel will only use normal zone(mirrored), and users use movable
zone(non-mirrored) first if the memory is not enough, then use normal zone too.

>> 2) the mirrored region should locate at the start of normal
>> zone, right?
>
> Precisely, "not-reliable" range of memory are handled by ZONE_MOVABLE.
> This patch does only that.

I mean the mirrored region can not at the middle or end of the zone,
BIOS should report the memory like this,

e.g.
BIOS
node0: 0-4G mirrored, 4-8G mirrored, 8-16G non-mirrored
node1: 16-24G mirrored, 24-32G non-mirrored

OS
node0: DMA DMA32 are both mirrored, NORMAL(4-8G), MOVABLE(8-16G)
node1: NORMAL(16-24G), MOVABLE(24-32G)

>
>>
>> I remember Kame has already suggested this idea. In my opinion,
>> I still think it's better to add a new migratetype or a new zone,
>> so both user and kernel could use mirrored memory.
>
> Hi, Xishi.
>
> I and Izumi-san discussed the implementation much and found using "zone"
> is better approach.
>
> The biggest reason is that zone is a unit of vmscan and all statistics and
> handling the range of memory for a purpose. We can reuse all vmscan and
> information codes by making use of zones. Introdcing other structure will be messy.

Yes, add a new zone is better, but it will change much code, so reuse ZONE_MOVABLE
is simpler and easier, right?

> His patch is very simple.
>

The following plan sounds good to me. Shall we rename the zone name when it is
used for mirrored memory, "movable" is a little confusion.

> For your requirements. I and Izumi-san are discussing following plan.
>
> - Add a flag to show the zone is reliable or not, then, mark ZONE_MOVABLE as not-reliable.
> - Add __GFP_RELIABLE. This will allow alloc_pages() to skip not-reliable zone.
> - Add madivse() MADV_RELIABLE and modify page fault code's gfp flag with that flag.
>

like this?
user: madvise()/mmap()/or others -> add vma_reliable flag -> add gfp_reliable flag -> alloc_pages
kernel: use __GFP_RELIABLE flag in buddy allocation/slab/vmalloc...

Also we can introduce some interfaces in procfs or sysfs, right?

Thanks,
Xishi Qiu

>
> Thanks,
> -Kame
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